Last year was not a pleasant one professionally. I don't regret my decision to take a shot at morning drive on the FM side. I regret the outcome. For many years, I've been telling the young bucks "just when you think you've seen it all in radio, stick around one more day." My experience at Hubbard Radio, which owns and operates 30 stations in the country (three in Chicago) redefined "seeing it all." One of these days I'll get around to sharing some sordid details.
Many here and on social media have been wondering, some lamenting, why I don't want to return to radio. It requires two interested parties to begin a negotiation. Neither the Score nor ESPN wants me back. I get it with the Score. Twice I said no to them since I did my last show after the Blackhawks got tripped by the Kings in the Western Conference finals in June of '14. In late August, they hired Patrick Mannelly.
That fall, I heard from Greg Solk, then the VP of programming at Hubbard. Solk hired me at the Loop in Jan. of '88. I respected his radio acumen enormously and, while I never desired doing mornings, a project with Greg's fingerprints on it AND on a station I usually enjoyed piqued my interest.
Greg and I were closing in on a deal when Mannelly resigned from the Score's midday show. The Score called again. Then-VP of CBS Chicago Rod Zimmerman took some money off the table (from the August offer) and said "this is not a negotiation." When we got together in-person the next day, I politely suggested to Rod "it became a negotiation when YOU called me." He wouldn't budge. The Score's offer was still six figures higher than what I was going to get from the Drive, but I really wanted to try the FM thing so I said no to the Score again and gave the Drive a shot.
Turned out to be the wrong move, but again, I don't regret trying it. I reconnected with some amazing talents and friends there and discovered some wonderful people. My PD, Curtiss Johnson, and I became fast friends and I was devastated when the company whacked him in January of '16. Kathy Voltmer is one of the sweetest girls I've ever met and being around her pleasant nature at 4:45 a.m. contributed largely to my fondness for the gig.
Last summer, Hubbard caved to the audience's less-than-favorable response to fewer songs and more chatter in the morning. Solk was fired and I lost whatever power I had. John Gallagher, then the market manager, generously offered me a buyout because they weren't going to deliver what they'd promised. BTW, Gallagher also got vaporized last summer. Soon after, Pete McMurray, Kathy and producer Scott Miller were shown the door. Radio...it's red hot.
I spent the fall golfing, fishing and trying to massage the decision makers at both sports yakkers. No dice. I was holding out some hope that following Terry Boers' retirement, a lineup shuffle might take place and there would be a spot for me. Or that ESPN would gimme a shot in its struggling midday slot. Neither is happening.
In the last couple weeks, I've been working an angle with a station in town that would be a really nice fit for me. Hope to have more on that for you soon. And yes, I've had a cursory conversation with the mysterious "third sports station" that may be born. I'll let you know when I can. Meantime, I'm meeting with publishers about my Patrick book and I've scheduled knee replacement surgery next month. Tired of getting cortisone shots every three months (that last about 6 weeks usually) and I don't want to go back on pain meds so I'm getting it done while I have some time to rehab it before golf and musky seasons open.
To good dolphin, I didn't answer Terry about my future on 1/5 because that event wasn't the right time. It was incredibly difficult to keep a stiff upper lip, but the day was billed "A Toast To Terry" and was in conjunction with the station's 25th anniversary. It would have been selfish to make it about me.
To spmack, who called me an asshole for not coming here to post: You need to understand I've been under "no comment" restrictions regarding what happened at the Drive until we got to the first of the year. I wanted to get paid for doing nothing for seven months! Further, it made no sense to make any public statements about conversations I was entertaining with a couple stations.
More soon. Hope those of you I know are doing well. I am grateful for those of you who still are in my corner.
|